Everyday Trance
From the May 26 BRAIN/MIND BULLETIN:
According to Ernest Rossi, a Los Angeles psychologist, most of us
are unaware that periodically throughout the day, we enter natural
trances. The apparent continuity that exists in everyday awareness,
Rossi explains, is a "precarious illusion" based on conversation,
task orientation and the like.
But still, the mind wanders, and memories flow easily. Some people
catch fleeting glimpses of "the big picture," while others become so
entranced that they neither see nor hear. Others may feel
uncomfortable and try to suppress what Rossi calls "personal truths
that come unbidden during these naturally unguarded periods."
The Basic Rest and Activity Cycle, which is at the root of these
trance states, is an ultradian rhythm -- a shift that occurs about
every 90 minutes. Researchers have reported a left-to-right
hemisphere shift as breathing changes from the right nasal passage
to the left. The crossover period lasts roughly 10 minutes.
Among the visual cues that accompany the shifts are relaxation,
reduced blinking, pupil dilation, reddening of the eyes, respiratory
slowdown, and sweating.
Rossi reports on everyday trances in a new volume on current
research and theory entitled HANDBOOK OF STATES OF CONSCIOUSNESS,
edited by Benjamin Wolman and Montague Ullman (Van Nostrand).